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Peter J. Denning, Editor in ChiefThe digitally connected world has become a large, swirling sea of information stripped of context.

We help our readers make sense of it, find meaning in it, learn what to trust, and prepare for the future that may show up. "Ubiquity and Your Future

Peter J. Denning,
Editor-in-Chief

Ubiquity Upgrades!

LATEST ARTICLES

opinion

Teens and Screens: Game of Life, Indeed: "The Remarkable Life of Ibelin"

by Espen Andersen

Sometimes, the most social person in the room might be the teen with the screen. ...


opinion

Teens and Screens: Age-based Restrictions to Internet Content

by Jeff Riley

Driven by concerns of perceived potential negative impacts on young people, a growing worldwide trend has emerged to restrict the access of young people to some online content, but shielding youth from the negatives of the internet by depriving them of the wonders to be found there, and the benefits that access brings, is not the answer. Our youth have shown us how they want to conduct their lives, and how they want to structure their society: They will conduct much of their lives online because it suits them to do so. Our role as parents and elders is to teach, to guide, to protect, and to help them make their chosen world a safe place. We need to let them experience, and they will learn and grow. ...



opinion

Teens and Screens: AI Companions Should Be Off-limits to Minors

by Michael J. Quinn

The death by suicide of 14-year-old Sewell Setzer III, who fell in love with an AI companion, raises additional questions for people already alarmed about the harmful effects of social media on the mental health of children and adolescents. Spending time with AI companions can be problematic, even for adults. They should be off-limits to minors until more is known about their long-term effects on individuals and society. ...


opinion

Artificial Intelligence: ChatGPT's Astonishing Fabrications About Percy Ludgate

by Brian Coghlan, Brian Randell, Noel O'Boyle, Walter Tichy

Shortly after ChatGPT burst into the public spotlight in late 2022, Brian Coghlan, Brian Randell, and Noel O'Boyle were intrigued by the repeated claim that ChatGPT would excel at supporting historical research. They had done extensive research on Percy Ludgate, a little-known computer pioneer who designed an analytical engine in 1909. Coghlan et al. put ChatGPT 3.5 to the test. They were astonished at its alacrity in producing authoritative-sounding but false answers to questions about Ludgate—questions whose answers they already knew through their own research. They concluded that the hallucination problem was much deeper than suspected. As part of our Symposium on AI, the editors of Ubiquity are pleased to publish this full technical report (lightly edited and reformatted) so that you can see for yourself. And as a bonus, you can learn a little about this amazing pioneer of computing. ...